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May 30, 2017
05/17
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loneliness has been my enemy. for many years. as a kid. growing up. we are off to do regional theater work. i started the career, i was always lonely, deathly lonely. loneliness was death. akin to what i am thinking about death. when i die, i will be alone. i have often talked about. i do a one-man show. what do you think that final moment is going to be like? i am dying. here is i am dying. now, what happens? that is the scary part. >> wow. >> the book is called "spirit of the horse, a celebration of fact and fable." i need to go home and process what he said for the rest of the night. there is a lot to marinate given what you just offered. >> thank you my friend. >> thank you. >> as always, keep the faith. for more information on today's show, visit tavis smiley at pbs.org. >> i am tavis smiley, join me with conversations about how companies are changing the world, like uber. that is next time, see you then. world, like uber. that is next time, see you then. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com ♪ - today on america's test kitchen, dan shows us ho
loneliness has been my enemy. for many years. as a kid. growing up. we are off to do regional theater work. i started the career, i was always lonely, deathly lonely. loneliness was death. akin to what i am thinking about death. when i die, i will be alone. i have often talked about. i do a one-man show. what do you think that final moment is going to be like? i am dying. here is i am dying. now, what happens? that is the scary part. >> wow. >> the book is called "spirit of the...
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68
Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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KQEH
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eye 68
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loneliness is enemy for many years as a kid growing up, my loneliness was death. so when i die, i'll be alone and i've often talked about and i do a one-man show and in that one-man show, i ask the audience, what do you think that final moment is going to be like, you're alive and conscious? i'm dying. i'm dying. hear is death and you're coming and say my god, i think i'm going to die. i'm dying. now what happens? that's the scary part. >> wow. the book is called "spirit of the horse, a celebration in fact and fable." i got to go home now and process what he said for the rest of the night. there's a lot of marinate on. given what you've just offered. i'm honored to have you on the program, sir. >> thank you. >> that's our show tonight. thanks for watching and as always, keep the faith. >> for more information on today's show, visit tavis smiley at pbs.org. >> hi, i'm tavis smiley, join me next time for a conversation with two-time emmy winner regina king. that's next time. we'll see you then. ♪ ♪ >> and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like yo
loneliness is enemy for many years as a kid growing up, my loneliness was death. so when i die, i'll be alone and i've often talked about and i do a one-man show and in that one-man show, i ask the audience, what do you think that final moment is going to be like, you're alive and conscious? i'm dying. i'm dying. hear is death and you're coming and say my god, i think i'm going to die. i'm dying. now what happens? that's the scary part. >> wow. the book is called "spirit of the...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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eye 124
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lexie was deftly getting lonelier -- >> he was definitely getting lonelier. the movement of broad people to march and journalists from all over the world to crusade for voting rights act am a that had only been a couple of years before. the movement had splintered over whether he should go north. the movement had splintered over but our. then he had to take on the war. finally, he had to take on the poor people's campaign. by the time he did that, he was very, very isolated and lonely. bouts ofepression, the depression continued. i think they became stronger. as they became stronger, he was driven more by conscience to make more of a witness. tavis: jesse jackson remembers a crucial meeting of family and friends. >> we got to the meeting early one saturday morning. and he came in the meeting and said i've had a migraine headache for about three days. i thought about quitting. we cover the back of the bus. public condemnations. we have the right to vote. down. real i felt depressed. maybe i should quit. and everybody got real quiet. then he said, but you know,
lexie was deftly getting lonelier -- >> he was definitely getting lonelier. the movement of broad people to march and journalists from all over the world to crusade for voting rights act am a that had only been a couple of years before. the movement had splintered over whether he should go north. the movement had splintered over but our. then he had to take on the war. finally, he had to take on the poor people's campaign. by the time he did that, he was very, very isolated and lonely....
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Sep 7, 2013
09/13
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KQEH
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that loneliness does impact confidence. tell me about your personal journey . --i was the one identified we don't diagnose me as being from new hampshire, i just am from new hampshire. [laughter] i am from dyslexia. now in the mainstream trying to figure out how things work. they gave my mother a box of tissues. my father said, how do you spell that? they immediately started focusing on my strengths. they said he is smart and capable, he worked out a plan and helped me learn. rights.me about the think of the law as you don't want your bodyguard to engage or fight somebody. you want people to know that you know the rules. my child is due a fair and appropriate education , it might be something you want to check into. this person knows what they are doing. in this book is giving people a boilerplate. these are the steps you need to go through. in certain contexts, it can be a gift. it has legal force and it protects your kid when someone doesn't want to play ball. notwithstanding your text, have we developed a best practice is to lan? with earlyt identification.
that loneliness does impact confidence. tell me about your personal journey . --i was the one identified we don't diagnose me as being from new hampshire, i just am from new hampshire. [laughter] i am from dyslexia. now in the mainstream trying to figure out how things work. they gave my mother a box of tissues. my father said, how do you spell that? they immediately started focusing on my strengths. they said he is smart and capable, he worked out a plan and helped me learn. rights.me about...
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Dec 18, 2013
12/13
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loneliness. her sense of knowing better than anyone else. tavis: we all cracked vessels and we are always in process. end, it occurse to me to ask, why did you write this? angelica houston doesn't get told what to do. >> she will accept suggestions. to begin with, here i am. i have been in this business for 45 years and there is a lot that people don't know about me. like the time before i came to los angeles before i met jack nicholson and before i came and academy award winner and had a life as an actress. these are the early underpinnings, many people don't know about it. probably some people can identify with it. i was doing a show called smash and working for nights or four days out of the week. the rest of the time, i was a little bit at loose ends. it was when i started to write the book. i will get you on camera, we will see you when this comes out. she is coming back for the second half. this stops when you're 20, basically. write, you like to whether the exercise or the hasrience of doing this made you more anxious or less anxious
loneliness. her sense of knowing better than anyone else. tavis: we all cracked vessels and we are always in process. end, it occurse to me to ask, why did you write this? angelica houston doesn't get told what to do. >> she will accept suggestions. to begin with, here i am. i have been in this business for 45 years and there is a lot that people don't know about me. like the time before i came to los angeles before i met jack nicholson and before i came and academy award winner and had a...
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333
Dec 13, 2013
12/13
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eye 333
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because we feel a loneliness. they come away feeling a little less lonely. that is your contribution. making us feel a little less lonely. the new book is called "a valley of amazement." everything she writes goes on the top of the list, starting with "the joy luck club." this is called "the valley of amazement." i hope it won't be eight years before we see each other again. >> i hope so, too. up, a conversation with actor levar burton. stay with us. years, levarr to burton has devoted much of his time to making sure kids experience the joy of reading. reading rainbow was, just until a few years ago, a statement on public television. it did not mean leaving the mission. a new delivery system is appropriate for this age. an app that puts together 72,000 books a week. i was joking about the fact that we always find a way. >> you have to be creative. reading rainbow out of the ready to learn lineup thing butt was a sad it became an opportunity for my business partner. it may not have breathed its last breath. making a deal in buffalo new york, the pbs station t
because we feel a loneliness. they come away feeling a little less lonely. that is your contribution. making us feel a little less lonely. the new book is called "a valley of amazement." everything she writes goes on the top of the list, starting with "the joy luck club." this is called "the valley of amazement." i hope it won't be eight years before we see each other again. >> i hope so, too. up, a conversation with actor levar burton. stay with us. years,...
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Feb 10, 2011
02/11
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. >> of the loneliness. knowing that my family was suffering. there are many other people going through the same thing, being kidnapped. not being able to know anything about anyone. not getting news from anyone. i believe this is the worst thing that can happen to a person. >> the farc has promised to release hostages on friday and saturday. they're perhaps and prompting the government into peace talks. they do appear to be interested in dialogue but they have demanded that all of the hostages in rebel hands be released. the rebels were willing to release all of the remaining hostages over the next six months which could pave the way for peace negotiations to end 46 years of civil conflict. >> you are watching "a bbc news ." refugees in the u.s. are thinking about going home to the sudan. three bombs have exploded in the northern iraqi city of kirkuk killing at least 70 people. -- killing at least seven people and injuring 70. two police are among the dead. these are the biggest attacks in the city for around six months. no group has claimed re
. >> of the loneliness. knowing that my family was suffering. there are many other people going through the same thing, being kidnapped. not being able to know anything about anyone. not getting news from anyone. i believe this is the worst thing that can happen to a person. >> the farc has promised to release hostages on friday and saturday. they're perhaps and prompting the government into peace talks. they do appear to be interested in dialogue but they have demanded that all of...
22
22
Jan 19, 2017
01/17
by
KQEH
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eye 22
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. >> he was definitely getting lonelier. from the pinnacle of the great movement in selma brought people done to march and journalists from all around the world, to, to, crusade for voting rights act. that had been a couple years before the movement had splintered over whether he should go north, the movement had splintered over black power, then he had to take on the war and finally he had to take on the poor people's campaign. by the time he did that, he was very, very isolated and lonely. and, and, the depression -- the bouts of depression continued. and driven by conscience to make more of a witness. >> jesse jackson remembers a crucial meeting of family and friends. and mild headache for three days. and -- i thought about quitting. and my democratic friend. some of my moorehouse classmates have turned against me. i felt real down, depressed. maybe i should quit. everybody got real quiet. and then said, you know, just like down in georgia, we can turn a minus into a plus. go on to memphis. preached himself out of a depre
. >> he was definitely getting lonelier. from the pinnacle of the great movement in selma brought people done to march and journalists from all around the world, to, to, crusade for voting rights act. that had been a couple years before the movement had splintered over whether he should go north, the movement had splintered over black power, then he had to take on the war and finally he had to take on the poor people's campaign. by the time he did that, he was very, very isolated and...
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Dec 24, 2011
12/11
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eye 107
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photo on was of osama bin laden sitting wrapped in a blanket watching tv with a remote control in utter loneliness in the last days of his life. >> vice president joe biden sound asleep while president obama was unveiling his plan to cut the nation's $15 billion debt. the best photo on. honorable mention, pat? >> i am going to borrow from rich. i take seal team six. magnificent job. risked their lives. the went in and did the job they were trained to do for their country. quite frankly, i am going to give barack obama credit for an assist on that one. >> an honorable mention on the honorable mention for holiday spirit. >> a near assist for the commander in chief. okay. i like miss merkle, who is really carrying the problems of the euro zone on her shoulders and we are very much reliant on her. and i would also like to mention the sale six team and the soldiers who are serving all of us so admirably around the world. they get way too little credit. >> rich? >> the muslim brotherhood and their ilk, who are the big short-term winners from the arab spring. >> all right. the new class of political mark
photo on was of osama bin laden sitting wrapped in a blanket watching tv with a remote control in utter loneliness in the last days of his life. >> vice president joe biden sound asleep while president obama was unveiling his plan to cut the nation's $15 billion debt. the best photo on. honorable mention, pat? >> i am going to borrow from rich. i take seal team six. magnificent job. risked their lives. the went in and did the job they were trained to do for their country. quite...
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Oct 19, 2013
10/13
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eye 41
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because the way things are now, you know, people think that loneliness is a problem that needs to be solved and that only technology can solve. >> what about technology's ability to enable us to be mean and malicious from a distance without any possibility of retaliation? why do people behave so differently on social media? >> because the face, the presence of another person inhibits the worst in us. and the fact that we can behave as behind a veil brings out this side where you feel as though you're disinhibited. there's no -- >> you're given permission. >> you're given permission. you're given permission. people behave -- cyber bullying, people behave as though they're not speaking to another human being. >> did you see the recent story about the 12-year-old girl who took her life after being bullying -- >> yes, yes. >> any take you can give us on that? any insight you can share with us about how technology feeds something like that? she could've just turned off the phone, put down the phone. >> no. no, she couldn't. because the phone has become her lifeline too, to her social worl
because the way things are now, you know, people think that loneliness is a problem that needs to be solved and that only technology can solve. >> what about technology's ability to enable us to be mean and malicious from a distance without any possibility of retaliation? why do people behave so differently on social media? >> because the face, the presence of another person inhibits the worst in us. and the fact that we can behave as behind a veil brings out this side where you...
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Aug 9, 2017
08/17
by
KQEH
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eye 36
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. >> loneliness suddenly hit. he doesn't know quite how to process it and the only thing he really has is just a sibling and that's it because the rest of his family clearly has nothing to do with him. but, yeah, he's -- he doesn't actually want to love his brother for his brother, he just loves him because it's his. >> rose: we conclude with a remembrance of glen campbell, died today at age 81. we talked to patrick doyle of rolling stone magazine and a portrait of glen campbell from anthony mason, the anchor of cbs "cbs evening news." >> he had a very clear tenor voice but he had all this emotion behind it, and you could hear the sadness in his voice, and it was just a lot of strings and slick music, but the songs were so good. >> rose: the future of the democratic party, the movie "good time," and remembering glen campbell, all of that when we continue. >> rose: funding for "charlie rose" has been provided by the following: >> and by bloomberg, a provider of multimedia news and information services worldwide. ca
. >> loneliness suddenly hit. he doesn't know quite how to process it and the only thing he really has is just a sibling and that's it because the rest of his family clearly has nothing to do with him. but, yeah, he's -- he doesn't actually want to love his brother for his brother, he just loves him because it's his. >> rose: we conclude with a remembrance of glen campbell, died today at age 81. we talked to patrick doyle of rolling stone magazine and a portrait of glen campbell...
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40
Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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eye 40
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and the things i don't like so much, her insecurity, her longing for affection and for love, her loneliness, her sense of knowing better than anyone else. >> of course, without all that, you wouldn't have -- we wouldn't have this anjelica huston. >> whoever she is. >> have you not figured that out yet? >> no. i'm always in process. [ laughter ] >> i think we all are, though. >> i hope so. >> we're all cracked vessels, and we're always in process, i think, every one of us. why -- i could have started our conversation with this. but as we get to the eend -- i could do this for hours. but it occurs to me ask, why even right this? did anyone push you into this? let me rephrase. she's not obedient to anybody. >> she'll accept suggestions, though. >> who suggested this idea? >> a couple of good friends, one of whom was gradon carter. >> vanity fair. >> yes, "vanity fair." >> but here i am, i have been in my business for 40, 45 years, and there's a lot people don't know about me like the whole period before i came to los angeles, before i met jack nicholson and before i became an academy award win
and the things i don't like so much, her insecurity, her longing for affection and for love, her loneliness, her sense of knowing better than anyone else. >> of course, without all that, you wouldn't have -- we wouldn't have this anjelica huston. >> whoever she is. >> have you not figured that out yet? >> no. i'm always in process. [ laughter ] >> i think we all are, though. >> i hope so. >> we're all cracked vessels, and we're always in process, i...
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May 17, 2011
05/11
by
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and for many like this 73-year-old ex-steelworker, the real reward is an escape from loneliness, isolation and fear, especially in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami. >> this allows me to be with my peers, to have someone to talk to. >> reporter: surveys show a majority of japanese men and many women desire at least part-time work well into their golden years. >> it's heally to keep working. your body would go to seed if you had nothing to do every day. >> reporter: now 30 years old, the silver human resource centers have become a fixture in more than 1,000 communities across japan. offering job training and matching seniors with employers. experts say there's a strong cultural need to remain productive throughout life. >> to to get it-- in english, probably getting a sense of fulfillment. that is very important for people to live 20 or 30 years after retirement. >> reporter: while salaries are paid by employers, the silver centers are taxpayer subsidized. yet officials say the investment has paid for itself. >> what we've discovered is that by staying active longer seniors stay health
and for many like this 73-year-old ex-steelworker, the real reward is an escape from loneliness, isolation and fear, especially in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami. >> this allows me to be with my peers, to have someone to talk to. >> reporter: surveys show a majority of japanese men and many women desire at least part-time work well into their golden years. >> it's heally to keep working. your body would go to seed if you had nothing to do every day. >> reporter:...
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96
May 6, 2011
05/11
by
KQEH
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eye 96
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certain loneliness and isolation. certain out of touchness and certain kind of inability perhaps because of circumstances to connect with as many people as we might freely connect with. but nevertheless, it continues to fascinate. i think that fascinated because at the center of it was a certain purity and goodness and good will, youthfulness and uncynical kind of warm hearted support for what we all understand. our partnership at the beginning of its life heading out into the great, you know, adventure of life. and something very good hearted about that. i think that's quite separate from what we often feel about our political leaders. where we bring to that cynicism and disappointment, a belief or skeptical attitude that suspects that perhaps corruption, compromise is at the center of it all. and i think we want the sort of rugged and robust engagement with politics and with leadership that we know to be these days ever more complicated. but we would love it to contain. some of the idealism, the youthfulness, the br
certain loneliness and isolation. certain out of touchness and certain kind of inability perhaps because of circumstances to connect with as many people as we might freely connect with. but nevertheless, it continues to fascinate. i think that fascinated because at the center of it was a certain purity and goodness and good will, youthfulness and uncynical kind of warm hearted support for what we all understand. our partnership at the beginning of its life heading out into the great, you know,...
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161
Feb 9, 2014
02/14
by
KQEH
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eye 161
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. >> it's the loss of control, frustration, the loneliness, the isolation. instead of fighting it, you sort of embraced it and it became a friend rather than something that was a problem. >> rose: we have those stories and more on what happened and what might happen.
. >> it's the loss of control, frustration, the loneliness, the isolation. instead of fighting it, you sort of embraced it and it became a friend rather than something that was a problem. >> rose: we have those stories and more on what happened and what might happen.
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Nov 4, 2017
11/17
by
KQEH
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eye 144
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but when he was a child and without his mother, because of that loneliness and that ache, he got into drugs, and he has lapsed off and on back into those bad habits. so it's been up and down, really. >> hinojosa: like the story of most migrants, right? >> yes. >> hinojosa: sonia nazario, thank you for telling enrique's story, and all of the other unnamed children. thank you for being here with us today. >> thank you, maria. >> hinojosa: continue the conversation at wgbh.org/oneonone. captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org newsroom. i'm thuy vu. coming up on our program, this week's key political developments from special counsel bob mueller's indictments to the gop tax reform proposal. also, as puerto rico continues to struggle torecover from hurricane maria, we'll talk to two california nurses who traveled there recently to provide aid. but first, a look at the investigation alleged russian interference in the 2016 election. this week, executives testified before congress about the role their companies played in allowing russian misinformation to spread in the run-up
but when he was a child and without his mother, because of that loneliness and that ache, he got into drugs, and he has lapsed off and on back into those bad habits. so it's been up and down, really. >> hinojosa: like the story of most migrants, right? >> yes. >> hinojosa: sonia nazario, thank you for telling enrique's story, and all of the other unnamed children. thank you for being here with us today. >> thank you, maria. >> hinojosa: continue the conversation at...
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87
Oct 5, 2013
10/13
by
KQEH
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eye 87
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it is harder as you grow old, for hope must not depend on feeling good and there's the dream of loneliness at absolute midnight. you also have withdrawn belief in the present reality of the future, which surely will surprise us, and hope is harder when it cannot come by prediction any more than by wishing. but stop dithering. the young ask the old to hope. what will you tell them? tell them at least what you say to yourself. because we have not made our lives to fit our places, the forests are ruined, the fields, eroded, the streams polluted, the mountains, overturned. hope then to belong to your place by your own knowledge of what it is that no other place is, and by your caring for it, as you care for no other place. this knowledge cannot be taken from you by power or by wealth. it will stop your ears to the powerful when they ask for your faith, and to the wealthy when they ask for your land and your work. be still and listen to the voices that belong to the stream banks and the trees and the open fields. find your hope, then, on the ground under your feet. your hope of heaven, let it r
it is harder as you grow old, for hope must not depend on feeling good and there's the dream of loneliness at absolute midnight. you also have withdrawn belief in the present reality of the future, which surely will surprise us, and hope is harder when it cannot come by prediction any more than by wishing. but stop dithering. the young ask the old to hope. what will you tell them? tell them at least what you say to yourself. because we have not made our lives to fit our places, the forests are...
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Apr 27, 2017
04/17
by
KQEH
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eye 38
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a sense of existential loneliness she think may be cured by being connected more and more. those parts of her are human and i think if people are honest with themselves -- >> are these opinions about technology or human ambition. >> both. i think technology can give a platform to who we are for better or worse. i heard people say it can amplify your humanity, whatever that means and the aspirational caught of terms people use, connectiveness and i think it is us trying to make better versions of ourselves through technology. >> charlie: what's the transition? what's the journey from coming in and recognizing there is something about the place where you don't accept it and accept it and fully in. is the transition simply being -- what? >> i think for mae she's gotten a dream job. i don't know anyone in 2017 wouldn't want to work at a company like this. people i went to school with at peace corps would work at a place like thing with health care for you and your family and free concerts and free food and the best and smartest minds coming in. everybody would want that and so
a sense of existential loneliness she think may be cured by being connected more and more. those parts of her are human and i think if people are honest with themselves -- >> are these opinions about technology or human ambition. >> both. i think technology can give a platform to who we are for better or worse. i heard people say it can amplify your humanity, whatever that means and the aspirational caught of terms people use, connectiveness and i think it is us trying to make...
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47
Jun 1, 2013
06/13
by
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eye 47
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let us sign up, sign in, and confess here at the altar of loneliness. >> bill moyers: sherry turkle has written a book called "alone together" on just this point. talking about how the internet has produced this serial isolation. >> sherman alexie: well, when i think the human is so complex, you know? and as we're relating here, we're relating on so many different levels that we don't consciously understand. i mean, we're actually smelling each other right now, but our, we, as we talk, don't know that, but our bodies know that, you know? my gestures, your gestures, the look in your eye. and the internet takes all that away. there was, there is one level of communication on the internet, which actually in a way is really insulting to the complexity of being human. >> bill moyers: how so? >> sherman alexie: it limits us to one sense. >> bill moyers: one dimension. >> sherman alexie: one dimension. and that's not who we are. the poetry, if you will, of life is reduced to this sort of dry, scientific, you know, it's the worst sort of prÉcis of who we are. and, you know, i don't have facebo
let us sign up, sign in, and confess here at the altar of loneliness. >> bill moyers: sherry turkle has written a book called "alone together" on just this point. talking about how the internet has produced this serial isolation. >> sherman alexie: well, when i think the human is so complex, you know? and as we're relating here, we're relating on so many different levels that we don't consciously understand. i mean, we're actually smelling each other right now, but our,...
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157
Jul 13, 2012
07/12
by
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eye 157
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. >> reporter: a report by the china youth research center states that loneliness is a major complaint of this new generation of migrants. another survey found that half of young male migrants polled said that low wages made them reluck tonight approach potential romantic partners. long working hours makes finding and maintaining a relationship difficult. a fellow migrant worker said (inaudible) and she left him for another guy. >> ( translated ): you need to think about your life partner but i'm scared of dating now. it's a waste of emotions, money, time, and nothing ever comes of it any way. >> reporter: waves of strikes and suicides by recent factory workers creates a problem, frustration caused by the gap between expectation and reality and inability to assimilate in cities are widespread. after riots in guangdong last year, the state council development research center published a report stating that less young migrants are absorbed into urban society with full rights conflicts would accumulate. it further warned it could create a major destabilizing threat. the desire for real ur
. >> reporter: a report by the china youth research center states that loneliness is a major complaint of this new generation of migrants. another survey found that half of young male migrants polled said that low wages made them reluck tonight approach potential romantic partners. long working hours makes finding and maintaining a relationship difficult. a fellow migrant worker said (inaudible) and she left him for another guy. >> ( translated ): you need to think about your life...
109
109
Feb 29, 2012
02/12
by
KQEH
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eye 109
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whether they were sorrowful or happy, moments of great loneliness or moments of great communion. we live for these moments in our life. and i do think poetry that is a way of -- it's a way of recognizing the moments, first of all, in your life. but also a way of preserving them. >> so this intensity visited you when you fell in love. you felt it again, when you had a diagnosis. tell me about that. what was the disease? >> it's called waldenstrÖm's macroglobulinemia. and there have been complications after that. so i have some additional things now. but it's a very rare cancer. it is in the bone marrow, primarily. but also it's everywhere in your body. and it is completely unpredictable. some people die quickly, some people live 30 years with it. and it doesn't even change. it doesn't even do anything in their bodies. >> but you were told, if i understand it, that you could die very soon. >> it looked like it at the beginning. and i've had two-- i've had a bone marrow transplant. so i have been on the verge of dying a couple of times. so it's been very difficult. i think less so
whether they were sorrowful or happy, moments of great loneliness or moments of great communion. we live for these moments in our life. and i do think poetry that is a way of -- it's a way of recognizing the moments, first of all, in your life. but also a way of preserving them. >> so this intensity visited you when you fell in love. you felt it again, when you had a diagnosis. tell me about that. what was the disease? >> it's called waldenstrÖm's macroglobulinemia. and there have...
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May 30, 2017
05/17
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i think even as a universallality as far as his loneliness and his desire to reach out and be reached out to. i think everyone in the show can go on this journey with him not only because it's beautifully written that he has self-effacing humor and has beautiful songs and a beautiful character but people find themselves in him. >> rose: this is what your mother talked and the "new york times." she says i contemplate ben's emotional state every day and how much time he spends alone. he's only 23 and should be with friends. how proud can a moth were. >> she's the most beautiful human being on the earth. this is a demanding role. i take it seriously, the responsibility to curate this evening and to create it eight times a week and give the same kind of emotional intensity and make sure the audience is having identical experience as possible and that requires a loft me as far as sacrificing social life and my lifestyle gets really affected but, of course, this is the kind of piece that is so beauty any written and so deeply felt that you want to give yourself to it and make the sacrifices
i think even as a universallality as far as his loneliness and his desire to reach out and be reached out to. i think everyone in the show can go on this journey with him not only because it's beautifully written that he has self-effacing humor and has beautiful songs and a beautiful character but people find themselves in him. >> rose: this is what your mother talked and the "new york times." she says i contemplate ben's emotional state every day and how much time he spends...
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45
Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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KQEH
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answer is it's not working for them, but b it creates a crisis of social solidarity, it creates too much loneliness, too much social frag men taigs and it's not giving them the rich community that's the essence of a good life. so the failure of the old order is not only an economic failure, it's a spiritual failure. >> rose: so what happens to those people who are living in some where? what's their future? >> well, you know, i would say to this political story, michael cruz, where he went to allentown or jonathan, steel mill, and we've all been to the towns where the mill is closed, everyone knows they're not coming back, but their family is there, but there is nothing to do, so the opioid awe buys is terrible. >> rose: more people died from opioid abuse last year than the entire vietnam war. >> pittsburgh is a great city to go to now, and you think pittsburgh is having a revival. well carnegie mellon is having a revival. the steel towns along the river are not. if we lived there we would all be on opiates because there is nothing else to do. how to get a revival in those places is a very difficult
answer is it's not working for them, but b it creates a crisis of social solidarity, it creates too much loneliness, too much social frag men taigs and it's not giving them the rich community that's the essence of a good life. so the failure of the old order is not only an economic failure, it's a spiritual failure. >> rose: so what happens to those people who are living in some where? what's their future? >> well, you know, i would say to this political story, michael cruz, where...
50
50
Sep 1, 2017
09/17
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KQEH
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think the character of evan is just object who has an incredible universality as far as his isolation, loneliness and his desire to reach out and be reached out to. and i think everybody that comes to the show finds themselve somewhere in him and can go on this journey with him not only because it is so beautifulfully written, to sort of this self-effacing humor and singing beautiful songs and are you liking him as a character but i think people really see some of their humanity in him. >> rose: this is what your mother told "the new york times." >> oh dear. >> always a reliable fours. >> rose: exactly. she said i con tell plate ben's emotional well-being every day, is he very mature but he is only 23, he should be out meeting friends and meeting people. i worry about how much time he spend as loan that is your mother. >> and she calls me to make sure i'm not a lone. >> you know. >> rose: how proud can one mother be. >> i mean, she is the most wonderful human being on the earth but we don't have to talk about that because that will take, if there is certainly a sacrifice involved with this piece,
think the character of evan is just object who has an incredible universality as far as his isolation, loneliness and his desire to reach out and be reached out to. and i think everybody that comes to the show finds themselve somewhere in him and can go on this journey with him not only because it is so beautifulfully written, to sort of this self-effacing humor and singing beautiful songs and are you liking him as a character but i think people really see some of their humanity in him....
101
101
Jun 29, 2017
06/17
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KQEH
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because for the united states, our alliances are what sets us apart from lonelier powers like russia and power that don't have that network of alliances and coalitions and partners. >> rose: there used to be the warsaw pact. >> right, but today they don't. so we need to invest in those over time. of course they have to change and a dament and of course our european partners need to do more for our common defense. but the united states needs to make clear the priority we attach to those alliances. >> rose: and then there are those issues that are not nation state but that are transnational. >> right. >> there are climate. >> rose: national security issues. >> they are. and increasingly food and security, water and security, global health issues. i mean the administration of george w. bush deserves enormous creddity for launching the-- initiative which has brought not just africa but most to the edge at least to the-- generation. those are really important things for the united states to lee. cyberissues are going to be an increasing challenge. in the nuclear field 60 years ago there w
because for the united states, our alliances are what sets us apart from lonelier powers like russia and power that don't have that network of alliances and coalitions and partners. >> rose: there used to be the warsaw pact. >> right, but today they don't. so we need to invest in those over time. of course they have to change and a dament and of course our european partners need to do more for our common defense. but the united states needs to make clear the priority we attach to...
248
248
Dec 17, 2012
12/12
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those are cries of terror and loneliness. they're really appeals to god for meaning. the words that are put in jesus' mouth in mark, "why have you forsaken me?" it's... it's the religious power of the psalms that is really one of those wonderful moments of concrete continuity between what this... this very passionately religious first-century jew might have been thinking as he was dying this horrible death on the cross as the finale to this... this week of passionate religious excitement and commitment. and... and asking god what happened. >> the plaque that was nailed to the cross is one of the few clear pieces of historical evidence that we have. >> iesus nazereno, rex iudorum. >> the plaque, which names him as jesus, the king of the jews, suggests that the charge on which he was executed was one of political insurrection, a threat to the pax romana. but he's also now a victim of the pax romana. >> narrator: in the year 51 of the common era, by the shores of the aegean sea, a visitor arrived at the greek city of corinth. his name was paul of tarsus. >> let's imagine
those are cries of terror and loneliness. they're really appeals to god for meaning. the words that are put in jesus' mouth in mark, "why have you forsaken me?" it's... it's the religious power of the psalms that is really one of those wonderful moments of concrete continuity between what this... this very passionately religious first-century jew might have been thinking as he was dying this horrible death on the cross as the finale to this... this week of passionate religious...